Latest AI News

OpenAI’s Codex CLI Prompt Bars GPT‑5.5 From Mentioning Goblins and Similar Creatures

OpenAI’s Codex CLI Prompt Bars GPT‑5.5 From Mentioning Goblins and Similar Creatures

OpenAI released the source code for its Codex command‑line interface last week, revealing a 3,500‑word system prompt for the newly unveiled GPT‑5.5. Among routine instructions, the prompt explicitly forbids the model from talking about goblins, gremlins, raccoons, trolls, ogres, pigeons or any other creature unless the user’s query makes it directly relevant. The restriction appears twice in the document and is absent from prompts for earlier models, suggesting OpenAI is responding to a spike in off‑topic references to such beings. OpenAI staff say the rule is a technical safeguard, not a marketing stunt.

SenseTime Launches Open-Source SenseNova U1 Model Optimized for Chinese Chips

SenseTime Launches Open-Source SenseNova U1 Model Optimized for Chinese Chips

Chinese AI firm SenseTime unveiled SenseNova U1, an open-source image model that processes visuals directly and runs on domestically produced chips. The release aims to offset U.S. export restrictions that have limited the company's access to advanced hardware. Available on Hugging Face and GitHub, the model promises faster image generation and interpretation, with support from ten Chinese chipmakers, including Cambricon and Biren Technology. Co‑founder and chief scientist Dahua Lin said the new architecture could help the firm regain ground in the global AI race and accelerate robotics applications.

Florida Attorney General launches criminal probe of OpenAI over alleged ChatGPT misuse

Florida Attorney General launches criminal probe of OpenAI over alleged ChatGPT misuse

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has opened a criminal investigation into OpenAI and its ChatGPT service after authorities say a university student used the chatbot to discuss violent scenarios and a recent campus shooting suspect posed disturbing questions to the AI. The probe will examine whether the platform aided or abetted illegal activity, citing state law that holds facilitators equally responsible. OpenAI maintains that ChatGPT is programmed to refuse providing instructions for criminal conduct.

Elon Musk Testifies in Oakland Trial Over OpenAI’s Shift to For‑Profit Model

Elon Musk Testifies in Oakland Trial Over OpenAI’s Shift to For‑Profit Model

Elon Musk took the stand Tuesday in a federal lawsuit accusing OpenAI of illegally converting from a nonprofit to a for‑profit venture. Speaking before a jury in Oakland, the SpaceX and X CEO warned that allowing the transition could set a precedent that threatens charitable organizations nationwide. OpenAI’s chief executive Sam Altman has been present but has not yet testified. The case, which centers on Musk’s $38 million early investment and the company’s 2019 restructuring, could reshape how AI firms are governed and regulated.

Malwarebytes adds scam‑detector connector to Claude AI assistant

Malwarebytes adds scam‑detector connector to Claude AI assistant

Malwarebytes is rolling out a new connector that integrates its threat‑intelligence engine directly into Anthropic's Claude. The add‑on lets users paste URLs, phone numbers or email addresses into a Claude chat and receive an instant verdict—safe, malicious, suspicious or unknown—along with remediation tips. The move comes as AI‑generated scams become increasingly convincing, with a recent Malwarebytes survey finding two‑thirds of respondents struggle to tell a fake from the real. The connector requires no Malwarebytes account and can be enabled in Claude’s settings.

ChatGPT finally counts ‘r’s in ‘strawberry’ but still trips on ‘cranberry’

ChatGPT finally counts ‘r’s in ‘strawberry’ but still trips on ‘cranberry’

OpenAI’s ChatGPT announced on April 28, 2026 that it could correctly count the three “r” letters in “strawberry,” a task that has long stumped language models. Within minutes, users demonstrated the bot still miscounted “cranberry,” reporting only one “r” instead of two. Tests of the same model on a classic “car‑wash” reasoning question also showed mixed results, with some competitors flagging the logical flaw that the model missed. The episode highlights both progress and lingering gaps in AI’s handling of simple counting and contextual reasoning.